Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

Rock Snot? What Rock Snot? Interview Request Sets Off Public Relations Flurry

The Canadian Press , 07 Sep, 2014 01:21 PM
    VANCOUVER - It was a story about rock snot.
     
    And if there's a person you want to talk to about the pervasive algae also known by the less-offensive, more scientific name of Didymo, it's Fisheries and Oceans Canada scientist Max Bothwell.
     
    Bothwell is, other scientists will tell you, the rock snot man. He wrote the book. Or in this case, co-authored a published article in a renowned scientific journal.
     
    But a request from The Canadian Press to speak to Bothwell when the article was published in May failed to produce an interview.
     
    What it did produce was 110 pages of emails to and from 16 different federal government communications operatives, according to documents obtained using access to information legislation.
     
    Many hours after the request was made the morning of May 8, an email from Robin Browne, strategic communications advisor for the Communications Division of Environment Canada, contained a list of responses for the approval of David Boerner, director general for water science and technology in the ministry.
     
    "CP asked to interview Max today but media relations is negotiating that to buy us more time. Thanks!" he wrote.
     
    Not long before that Bothwell — described by the co-author of the article as "really the Yoda of knowledge about Didymo" —  tried to hurry things along.
     
    "I will search my computer for the approved responses from the last interview," Bothwell wrote to a growing list of media handlers.
     
    That unleashed a frenzy of emails trying to find the aforementioned "approved" responses. It appeared they were not located, and approval had to begin from scratch.
     
    The emails refer to "agreed answers" for the scientist and "approved interview script" throughout.
     
    "Can we prepare answers to these questions please," Danny Kingsberry, acting manager of media relations, wrote. "I will get necessary approvals and we will schedule the interview after."
     
    Unfortunately, that didn't happen.
     
    The Canadian Press story about Bothwell's breakthrough on the origins of this pervasive algae appeared on news sites and in newspapers across the country without Max Bothwell, a research scientist at the Pacific Biological Station in Nanaimo, B.C.
     
    Why the fuss?
     
    Calvin Sandborn, a lawyer with the Environmental Law Centre at the University of Victoria, thinks he may have some idea.
     
    Politically sensitive issues are red-flagged for tight political control, said Sandborn, who helped author a comprehensive report by the law centre.
     
    "In particular, if they're talking about issues that are sensitive to the oil and gas industry — specific issues like climate change or oilsands or grizzly bears."
     
    Of the 110 pages, one single sheet offers a hint.
     
    "Blooms are the result of global climate change factors," said the document, entitled "background advice."
     
    A complaint from the centre and the group Democracy Watch prompted the federal Information Commissioner to launch an investigation last year into government communications practices.
     
    Since the Conservatives took office in 2006, the "information services" sector of government has swelled more than 15 per cent, to some 4,000 employees, according to a report by the Parliamentary Budget Office.
     
    These days, Canadian scientists are sent to international conferences with "government minders," Sandborn said.
     
    "It's crazy. We have fisheries scientists saying that they're restricted from issuing red tide warnings without getting political approval from Ottawa," he said. 
     
    "So, you have a government scientist put in a quandary: do we issue a red tide warning — because red tides can kill people — do I do that right now or do I send it off to Ottawa and follow all the protocols and just hope that nobody dies while we're waiting for political approval from a minister's office?"

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Lac-Megantic criminal probe leads Quebec police to MMA chairman's U.S. office

    Lac-Megantic criminal probe leads Quebec police to MMA chairman's U.S. office
    Quebec police investigating the Lac-Megantic train disaster say they've visited the United States four times to seize documents and to interview witnesses — including railway boss Ed Burkhardt.

    Lac-Megantic criminal probe leads Quebec police to MMA chairman's U.S. office

    Police identify victims of double homicide at home in rural Prince Edward Island

    Police identify victims of double homicide at home in rural Prince Edward Island
    Police have identified a father and his son who were found dead Wednesday evening in a home in rural Prince Edward Island.

    Police identify victims of double homicide at home in rural Prince Edward Island

    Canadian soldier acquitted on charge of sexually assaulting female subordinate

    Canadian soldier acquitted on charge of sexually assaulting female subordinate
    A Canadian soldier has been acquitted of sexually assaulting a female subordinate.

    Canadian soldier acquitted on charge of sexually assaulting female subordinate

    Whitecaps FC trade Nigel Reo-Coker to Chivas U.S.A. for Mauro Rosales

    Whitecaps FC trade Nigel Reo-Coker to Chivas U.S.A. for Mauro Rosales
    VANCOUVER - Nigel Reo-Coker is leaving the only Major League Soccer club that he has ever known. The Whitecaps confirmed in a news release Thursday that they have traded Reo-Coker, a 30-year-old former English Premier League star who was in his second season with the team, to Chivas U.S.A. for fellow midfielder Mauro Rosales.

    Whitecaps FC trade Nigel Reo-Coker to Chivas U.S.A. for Mauro Rosales

    Man charged with murder after father, adult son found slain in Prince Edward Island

    Man charged with murder after father, adult son found slain in Prince Edward Island
    A 46-year-old man has been charged with two counts of first-degree murder in the deaths of a man and his adult son at a home in rural Prince Edward Island.

    Man charged with murder after father, adult son found slain in Prince Edward Island

    Family passes on love for twins who died 61 years ago by helping other newborns

    Family passes on love for twins who died 61 years ago by helping other newborns
    More than 60 years after the death of their twins, a B.C. family is passing on its love for the little boy and girl by helping other newborns.

    Family passes on love for twins who died 61 years ago by helping other newborns